Several gradual phases.
The first stages seem this naive and delusional conditional acceptance, of denial of flaws fueled by sheer pride.
In which can take years to mellow out, to figure it out the sources of which, and into eventuality getting closer towards truer self acceptance.
And not fall into pitfalls, which is several from what I've seen who went through the same path.
If one falls into such, one had to recognize it -- which is tricky to say the least; before climbing out of it, which can be a challenge itself.
Many of which are stuck from the very first phases because it felt too good -- and leaving will be very painful to.
In which I was able to past through, alone.
The pride would allow me to see if there is something I can do to achieve certain states and consistency, fight that unwanted habits will not be true forever.
And, when that fails, usually after years of trying several solutions that did not work, I would have to give up on it.
But there's an odd reaction when one chose to give up on that; it can become paradoxical wish granting solution, or it can be a detrimental dead end.
The former feels liberating.
The latter is another pitfall to figure how to climb out of.
Really, as long as I can do something about my flaws, I won't stop fighting it until there's truly nothing I can do with it.
And then there's another layer; in which how the body and mind and emotions are separate yet are also one.
What exactly is your relationship towards your own mind? Your own body? Your own emotions?